The Journal of Neuroscience, April 15, 1998, 18(8):2962-2973
Electrical Properties of Frog Saccular Hair Cells: Distortion by
Enzymatic Dissociation
Cecilia E.
Armstrong and
William M.
Roberts
Institute of Neuroscience, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon
97403-1254
Although it is widely accepted that the electrical resonance seen
in many types of auditory and vestibular hair cells contributes to
frequency selectivity in these sensory systems, unexplained discrepancies in the frequency (f) and
sharpness (Q) of tuning have raised serious questions. For example,
enzymatically dissociated hair cells from bullfrog (Rana
catesbeiana) sacculus resonate at frequencies well above the
range of auditory and seismic stimuli to which the sacculus is most
responsive. Such disparities, in addition to others, have led to the
proposal that electrical resonance alone cannot account for frequency
tuning. Using grassfrog (Rana pipiens) saccular hair
cells, we show that the reported discrepancies in f and
Q in this organ can be explained by the deleterious
effects of enzyme (papain) exposure during cell dissociation. In
patch-clamp studies of hair cells in a semi-intact epithelial
preparation, we observed a variety of voltage behaviors with
frequencies of 35-75 Hz. This range is well below the range of
resonant frequencies observed in enzymatically dissociated hair cells
and more in tune with the frequency range of natural stimuli to which
the sacculus is maximally responsive. The sharpness of tuning also
agreed with previous studies using natural stimuli. In contrast to
results from enzymatically dissociated hair cells, both a
calcium-activated K+ (KCa)
current and a voltage-dependent K+
(KV) current contributed to the oscillatory
responses of hair cells in the semi-intact preparation. The properties
of the KCa and the Ca2+ current were
altered by enzymatic dissociation. KV and a
small-conductance calcium-activated K+ current were
apparently eliminated.
Key words:
frog saccular hair cells; semi-intact epithelial
preparation; enzymatically dissociated; electrical resonance; voltage
oscillations; K+ currents; Ca2+
current; papain
Copyright © 1998 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/98/1882962-12$05.00/0